09-16-2020 05:41 PM
I had this one
staring me in the face most of today before I finally realized what it was...
-joeorbob
09-17-2020 02:36 AM
@User002 wrote:
I had this one
staring me in the face most of today before I finally realized what it was...
-joeorbob
Well...
Sometimes code like that is convenient during testing. If you're not sure the First Call does the job, the Boolean is a quick way to test by switching between "always true" and "first time true".
I'd at least make it a control. Then I can set it to true while running, and it will reset to false next time I load the code. So if I forget to remove it, at least it won't do anything.
Of course it should be removed after testing. But I feel this could be a "left over from testing" instead of "Rube Goldberg".
09-22-2020 03:49 PM
I am not going to repeat the entire discussion here, but the collective efforts of a few community members was able to iteratively speed this code up ~30000x (from 5 minute to a few ms) and literally reduce it to the size of a postage stamp. 😄
09-30-2020 03:59 PM
To add a single point to a chart, we apparently need to (1) take a subset containing one element, then (2) turn it into a 2D array with one element, before (3) feeding it to the chart. Repeat for four other charts. (Seen here).
I can think of something slightly simpler. 😄
10-10-2020 03:42 PM
My gut feeling is that this can be slightly simplified, but I cannot find a replacement. Which palette contains a wire?
10-12-2020 02:44 AM
@altenbach wrote:
My gut feeling is that this can be slightly simplified, but I cannot find a replacement. Which palette contains a wire?
I took the liberty to try and simplify it a bit 😄
10-29-2020 03:12 PM
Most are familiar how to flip a boolean, but have you ever tried the double-back-flip-triple-axel-boolean operation?
10-29-2020 03:16 PM
@altenbach wrote:
Most are familiar how to flip a boolean, but have you ever tried the double-back-flip-triple-axel-boolean operation?
I believe it is called a triple lindy.
mcduff
10-29-2020 04:08 PM
@mcduff wrote:
I believe it is called a triple lindy.
Ha! You are right! Totally forgot about this one. 🙂
10-29-2020 04:36 PM
It took me far too long to realize this was a parody.
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